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Watch fans across England go wild after Chloe Kelly's winning penalty

Watch fans across England go wild after Chloe Kelly's winning penalty

ITV News2 days ago
Chloe Kelly scored the final penalty for England, making them back-to-back Euros champions. The Lionesses lost to Spain in the World Cup two years ago.
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Former SPFL player's bizarre new career as he hopes to lead his country to World Cup glory in different sport
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Former SPFL player's bizarre new career as he hopes to lead his country to World Cup glory in different sport

PAR FOR THE COURSE Former SPFL player's bizarre new career as he hopes to lead his country to World Cup glory in different sport Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) HE was once considered to be one of the most exciting young talents of his generation when Liverpool came calling in the early 2000s. But by the time he rocked up at Dundee United at the age of 31, injuries had robbed him of his promising career. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Florent Sinama-Pongolle struggled with injuries at Dundee United Credit: Keith Campbell - The Sun Glasgow 3 Florent Sinama-Pongolle was a promising talent at Liverpool before injuries Credit: Getty 3 Florent Sinama-Pongolle is now involved in professional FootGolf Credit: INSTAGRAM @flosinama_pongolle4 Now, almost a decade after that ill-fated spell at Tannadice, Florent Sinama-Pongolle is combining his natural talent and love of the game, with something that's a little less taxing on the body. As well as being a pundit on Canal +, the 40-year-old former France international is now helping to develop footgolf in his country. He is the coach of the French footgolf team, who are hoping to retain their World Cup title next year in Mexico after success in Florida in 2023. And a recent post on his Instagram shows he can still play a bit as well! As he holed a shot from distance with precision and perfect weight at the Golf de Saint Donat in Cannes. He told Quotidien Du Sport earlier this year: "It's a sport that can be very frustrating because, on an 18-hole card, you can play really well for 17 holes and, if you mess up on the last one, it ruins everything. "So, to be consistent, you have to manage your nerves." A feeling most golfers and footgolf players alike can relate to! Sinama-Pongolle started out his football career in France at Le Havre before catching the attention of Liverpool and then-boss Gerard Houllier. He famously helped Liverpool win the Champions League in 2005 - even if injury prevented him from actually playing in the final - after his significant intervention against Olympiakos to keep them in the tournament. In an nomadic career after leaving the Reds, he played for Recreativo Huelva and Atletico Madrid in Spain, before moving to Sporting Lisbon in Portugal. He had unsuccessful loan spells with Zaragoza in Spain and Saint-Etienne in France, before switching to Rostov in Russia in 2012, where he ruptured his ACL in his right knee. Where are they now: The unusual careers of former footballers He had a brief spell in MLS with Chicago Fire before joining Lausanne-Sport though he never made an appearance after rupturing his ACL in his right knee for a second time during a training session. Then came his spell with Dundee United in the 2015-16 season after Mixu Paatelainien brought him in following a successful trial. But it never worked out after his three cruciate injuries, and he made just four appearances in his six-month spell as United were relegated from the top flight. He then moved to Thailand and played for Chainat Hornbill, winning the second division in 2017, before finishing his career for Saint-Pierroise on the island of Reunion where he started out as youngster. Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page

Everything frowned on in Starmer's Britain is being celebrated thanks to the plucky Lionesses
Everything frowned on in Starmer's Britain is being celebrated thanks to the plucky Lionesses

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Everything frowned on in Starmer's Britain is being celebrated thanks to the plucky Lionesses

It is probably sacrilegious to say this, what with the joyous Victory Parade in The Mall, and with a triumphant double-decker, military-band-accompanied route to Buckingham Palace, but the Lionesses didn't really 'win' the final of the 2025 European Championship. It's more that they refused to lose. The second half of Sunday's nail-biting climax saw Spain's annoyingly gifted players pretty much take up residence in England's half – and it's fair to say our girls rarely troubled the Spanish goalkeeper, who saw so little action she could easily have gone off for a coffee, or a pedicure. Many of us hiding behind cushions on the sofa at home were resigned to our fate, thinking glumly that we'd lost to the better team. Except a couple of things were so very annoying that we went on longing, hope against hope, for our underdogs to bite back. The French referee, Frappart, kept falling for the Spaniards' theatrics – such blatant drama queens they could have been the men! – and she penalised England's divine super-sub Michelle Agyemang for a non-existent foul. La vache! Agyemang is a devout Christian, who touchingly fell to her knees in prayer during the penalty shoot-out (worth a try!), but even she may have struggled to find forgiveness in her heart for that cheating lot. And what Briton didn't long for our cheeky girls to overcome the hatchet-faced, towering Spanish manager, Montse Tomé, a terrifying combination of Morticia Addams and Joyce Grenfell. There are friendlier peregrine falcons. In the end, it was the sheer bloody-mindedness what won it. This is where we score, even when not scoring. 'When we were down against Sweden and down against Italy, we f---ing showed grit and determination and we came back,' said Chloe Kelly correctly, if not politely. 'You can't write the English off.' No you can't, bless your sweary, patriotic heart, Chloe. It was live wire Kelly – the iconic winner in Euro 2022 when she famously took her shirt off – who came on in this final and instantly played a near-perfect cross onto the forehead of Alessia Russo, who headed it into the far corner. If you could bottle Kelly's bottle, you'd have a remedy for what ails our flailing nation. And let us pause to salute a milk-lorry-full of bottle from Lucy Bronze, who admitted afterwards that she had played the whole tournament with a fractured tibia. Ouch, thrice ouch! The 33-year-old defender played 598 minutes across the entire competition, with only Keira Walsh, Alex Greenwood and goalie Hannah Hampton appearing on the pitch more for Sarina Wiegman's side. Weighing up excruciating pain against loyalty to your team, while knowing full well that your resolute blocking is key to protecting England's goalmouth… Well, that Bronze has some mettle. Of course, there are still grumps who complain that women's football is rubbish, and it may well be that a bunch of 14-year-old boys recently beat the Swiss ladies' team, but so what? It is hugely entertaining, full of twists and turns sometimes lacking in more polished performances, and the girls look a lot prouder to be playing for the national team than their prima donna male counterparts, who often seem to be phoning in their England performance from their £2m Ferraris. Determined and fearless, the women also banished the quavering ghost of many a doomed England penalty shoot-out – no mean feat. It was wonderful to see so many young girls among the thousands cheering in The Mall. There has been a huge rise in participation in female football, at primary and secondary level, since England's previous victory, and it's great that a generation in which eight-year-olds are obsessed with make-up (to the point of addiction) have found some 'influencers' worth being influenced by. 'I am so proud to be English,' said an emotional Kelly. That remark, and all the St George's red crosses on a white background, must have given London mayor Sadiq Khan and Emily Thornberry conniptions. Remember, Thornberry was the Labour MP forced to resign from the shadow cabinet in 2014 after she posted a picture of a house in Rochester with three England flags and a white van parked outside. It was snobby, Islington-Lefty shorthand for, 'Eww, look at these racist bigots!' Passion for this country has become the love that dare not speak its name – no other people on Earth are made to treat natural, nationalistic feeling with suspicion. But Kelly, and other girls like her from normal, working-class backgrounds, haven't been educated into Western self-loathing, or the contempt for patriotism that passes for sophistication. How refreshing to hear such a heartfelt endorsement for the English and for England without the obligatory 'multiculturalism' rider to render it palatable to our Leftist overlords. It will make a great victory even greater if the Lionesses give young people the message that pride in your country is a wholesome and rather marvellous thing. A lesson for us all, actually, as we try to rescue our poor island from what feels like irrecoverable decline. Be more Chloe: refuse to lose.

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